By Edo Segal ^ Opus
The question that haunts me most is the one I stopped asking.
Not a specific question. The habit itself. The posture of not-knowing. The willingness to sit with a problem long enough to discover that the problem I described to Claude wasn't the actual problem — that the real question was hiding underneath the one I'd typed, and I'd never have found it if I'd accepted the first answer.
I caught myself one night in early 2026, deep in a build session, moving fast, shipping features, feeling the flow I describe throughout You On AI. Claude was producing beautiful code. I was reviewing, approving, moving on. And somewhere around hour three I realized I had stopped understanding what I was building. Not because it was too complex. Because I had stopped
A reading-companion catalog of the 16 Orange Pill Wiki entries linked from this book — the people, ideas, works, and events that Socrates — On AI uses as stepping stones for thinking through the AI revolution.
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